art sculpture artist human animal environment nature culture technology pollution relation ecology myth romantism destruction representation lost
✖ Via Kate Macdowell: First and last breath, 11”x9”x12”, hand built porcelain, mixed media, 1/2010

Artist’s statement:

In my work this romantic ideal of union with the natural world conflicts with our contemporary impact on the environment. These pieces are in part responses to environmental stressors including climate change, toxic pollution, and gm crops. They also borrow from myth, art history, figures of speech and other cultural touchstones. In some pieces aspects of the human figure stand-in for ourselves and act out sometimes harrowing, sometimes humorous transformations which illustrate our current relationship with the natural world. In others, animals take on anthropomorphic qualities when they are given safety equipment to attempt to protect them from man-made environmental threats. In each case the union between man and nature is shown to be one of friction and discomfort with the disturbing implication that we too are vulnerable to being victimized by our destructive practices. (read on)

First spotted via Who Killed Bambi.



• Aug 19, 2010 link notes tagged: art  sculpture  artist  human  animal  environment  nature  culture  technology  pollution  relation  ecology  myth  romantism  destruction  representation  lost 
art painter painting ruins decay city classic modern landscape ethereal romantism
✖ Via The Wall Street Journal: “Getty Museum Buys Turner for $45 Million” by Kelly Crow, July 7th, 2010 [click for hi-res]
The J. Paul Getty Museum in Los Angeles paid Sotheby’s in London GBP 29.7 million ($45 million) on Wednesday for a sweeping, hazy view of 19th-century Rome by British master J.M.W. Turner.

The sale broke the auction record for Turner four years after the artist’s Venetian seascape “Giudecca, La Donna della Salute and San Giorgio” sold for $35 million at Christie’s.

The Getty beat out five other bidders for “Modern Rome – Campo Vaccino.” The auction house had priced the painting sell for between $18 million and $27 million.

Turner, a Romantic artist known for painting wispy clouds and roiling waves, painted “Modern Rome” in 1839, a decade after he visited the city for a final time. Eschewing any telltale signs of modernization, Turner presents an ethereal view of the Italian capital as seen from atop Capitoline Hill. Women in blue and yellow skirts herd goats in the rocky foreground as the city’s ruins fan across the sun-drenched expanse below. The Coliseum, painted in cappuccino colors, even appears to glow. (more)

Previously on Skandalon



• Jul 10, 2010 link notes tagged: art  painter  painting  ruins  decay  city  classic  modern  landscape  ethereal  romantism 
art painter painting romantism sea water ship shipwreck destruction lost death chaos
✖ Via

William Turner - The Complete Works: “The Shipwreck” c. 1805

“Joseph Mallord William Turner (23 April 1775 – 19 December 1851) was an English Romantic landscape painter, watercolourist and printmaker, whose style can be said to have laid the foundation for Impressionism. Although Turner was considered a controversial figure in his day, he is now regarded as the artist who elevated landscape painting to an eminence rivalling history painting.” (more)



• May 22, 2010 link notes tagged: art  painter  painting  romantism  sea  water  ship  shipwreck  destruction  lost  death  chaos 

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